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      Mechanical properties of a bio-inspired robotic knifefish with an undulatory propulsor

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      Bioinspiration & Biomimetics
      IOP Publishing

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          Abstract

          South American electric knifefish are a leading model system within neurobiology. Recent efforts have focused on understanding their biomechanics and relating this to their neural processing strategies. Knifefish swim by means of an undulatory fin that runs most of the length of their body, affixed to the belly. Propelling themselves with this fin enables them to keep their body relatively straight while swimming, enabling straightforward robotic implementation with a rigid hull. In this study, we examined the basic properties of undulatory swimming through use of a robot that was similar in some key respects to the knifefish. As we varied critical fin kinematic variables such as frequency, amplitude, and wavelength of sinusoidal traveling waves, we measured the force generated by the robot when it swam against a stationary sensor, and its velocity while swimming freely within a flow tunnel system. Our results show that there is an optimal operational region in the fin's kinematic parameter space. The optimal actuation parameters found for the robotic knifefish are similar to previously observed parameters for the black ghost knifefish, Apteronotus albifrons. Finally, we used our experimental results to show how the force generated by the robotic fin can be decomposed into thrust and drag terms. Our findings are useful for future bio-inspired underwater vehicles as well as for understanding the mechanics of knifefish swimming.

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          Most cited references20

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          Undulatory swimming in sand: subsurface locomotion of the sandfish lizard.

          The desert-dwelling sandfish (Scincus scincus) moves within dry sand, a material that displays solid and fluidlike behavior. High-speed x-ray imaging shows that below the surface, the lizard no longer uses limbs for propulsion but generates thrust to overcome drag by propagating an undulatory traveling wave down the body. Although viscous hydrodynamics can predict swimming speed in fluids such as water, an equivalent theory for granular drag is not available. To predict sandfish swimming speed, we developed an empirical model by measuring granular drag force on a small cylinder oriented at different angles relative to the displacement direction and summing these forces over the animal movement profile. The agreement between model and experiment implies that the noninertial swimming occurs in a frictional fluid.
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            Hydromechanics of Aquatic Animal Propulsion

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              Mechanics of swimming and flying

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Bioinspiration & Biomimetics
                Bioinspir. Biomim.
                IOP Publishing
                1748-3182
                1748-3190
                June 01 2011
                June 01 2011
                : 6
                : 2
                : 026004
                Article
                10.1088/1748-3182/6/2/026004
                21474864
                84206da3-27e2-4df9-a83c-5350cb44067c
                © 2011
                History

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